News
10h
Stars Insider on MSNHow inflation caused the collapse of the Roman EmpireThe fall of the Roman Empire remains one of the most intriguing and widely studied events in human history. While traditional ...
2d
Live Science on MSNRoman army camp found in Netherlands, beyond the empire's frontierArchaeologists and students in the Netherlands have unearthed a 1,800-year-old temporary Roman military fort in the ...
20h
IDR.com on MSNArchaeologists Unearth Rare 1,800-Year-Old Roman Camp in Netherlands, Beyond the Empire’s BorderA rare Roman military camp discovered deep in the Dutch Veluwe reveals the empire's reach extended far beyond its known ...
The Lower Germanic Lines, now in the Netherlands, had been considered the northernmost outpost of the Roman Empire. But the discovery of a fort at the Hoog Buurlo site in Veluwe, dated to the second ...
An expert said there could be more scrolls out there as artificial intelligence and other new technology helps to decipher ...
Thousands of newly discovered fragments, which once adorned a high-status Roman building, offer an unprecedented glimpse into ...
While the eastern half of the Roman Empire survived in some form for another thousand years, brought to an end only by the Ottoman sultan Mehmed the Conqueror in 1453, ...
17d
Smithsonian Magazine on MSNArchaeologists Stumble Onto Sprawling Ancient Roman Villa During Construction of a Road in FranceLocated near Auxerre, the grand estate once possessed an exorbitant level of wealth, with thermal baths and heated floors ...
By Peter Edwell for The ConversationStanding in the vast ruins of the Baths of Caracalla in Rome, hundreds of gulls circle above. Their haunting cries echo voices from 1,800 years ago.
A remarkable archaeological find in the heart of London has revealed one of the most extensive collections of Roman frescoes ever found in the city.
Roman men liked to write, and they did a lot of it, and then over time, the people who were obsessed with Rome wrote a lot about them and their times. The Founding Fathers of the United States ...
At its height in 117 AD, the Roman Empire covered 40 modern nations and 5 million square km. Sea crossings aside, you could walk from northern Britain to the Persian Gulf and have never left the ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results